Latest air strikes on Gaza push overall Palestinian death toll above 52,200

Israel ended its ceasefire with Hamas by launching a surprise bombardment on March 18, and has been carrying out daily waves of strikes since then.

By contributor Wafaa Shurafa and Samy Magdy, Associated Press
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People viewing buildings damaged in air strikes
Palestinians inspect the damage after an Israeli air strike in Gaza City (Jehad Alshrafi/AP)

Hospitals in the Gaza Strip received the remains of 51 Palestinians killed in Israeli air strikes in the past 24 hours, the local Health Ministry said on Sunday, bringing the Palestinian death toll from the 18-month Israel-Hamas war to 52,243.

Israel ended its ceasefire with Hamas by launching a surprise bombardment on March 18, and has been carrying out daily waves of strikes since then.

Ground forces have expanded a buffer zone and encircled the southern city of Rafah, and now control around 50% of the territory.

Israel has also sealed off the territory’s two million Palestinians from all imports, including food and medicine, for nearly 60 days. Aid groups say supplies will soon run out and that thousands of children are malnourished.

The overall death toll includes nearly 700 bodies for which the documentation process was recently completed, the ministry said in its latest update. The daily toll includes bodies retrieved from the rubble after earlier strikes.

A large crowd people, some holding Israeli flags
A huge demonstration demanding the immediate release of hostages held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip took place in Tel Aviv, Israel, on Saturday (Ohad Zwigenberg/AP)

Israeli strikes killed another 23 people after the ministry’s update. Eight of them, including three children and two women, were killed in a strike on a tent in the southern city of Khan Younis, according to Nasser Hospital.

A strike in the central city of Deir al-Balah killed four people, according to Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, and another on a tent there killed four children and a man, the hospital said.

A strike hit a coffee shop near the entrance to the Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza, killing at least six people, according to Al-Awda and Al-Aqsa hospitals.

Israeli authorities say the renewed offensive and tightened blockade are aimed at pressuring Hamas to release hostages abducted in its October 7, 2023 attack that triggered the war.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to continue the war until Hamas is destroyed or disarmed, and all the hostages are returned.

Hamas has said it will only release the remaining 59 hostages – 24 of whom are believed to be alive – in exchange for Palestinian prisoners, a lasting ceasefire and a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, as called for in the now-defunct ceasefire reached in January.

Gaza’s Health Ministry says women and children make up most of the Palestinian deaths, but it does not say how many were militants or civilians. It says another 117,600 people have been wounded in the war.

The overall tally includes 2,151 dead and 5,598 wounded since Israel resumed the war last month.

Israel says it has killed around 20,000 militants, without providing evidence. The military says it tries to avoid harming civilians and it blames Hamas for their deaths because the militants operate in densely populated areas.

Israel’s offensive has destroyed vast parts of Gaza and displaced around 90% of its population, leaving hundreds of thousands of people sheltering in squalid tent camps or bombed-out buildings.

Elsewhere, Yemen’s Houthi rebels launched a missile early on Sunday towards Israel, which the Israeli military said it shot down as US strikes in the Houthi-held capital of Sanaa killed two people.

Sirens sounded in parts of Israel around the Dead Sea. The military said “the missile was intercepted prior to crossing into Israeli territory”.

Houthi military spokesman Brig Gen Yahya Saree claimed the attack, saying the rebels targeted Israel’s Nevatim air base with what he identified as a hypersonic missile.